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Thursday, October 28, 2010

Identity theft is on the rise, but there are deterrents

Ambler Gazette > News


Thursday, October 28, 2010
By Linda Finarelli
Staff Writer
It’s no secret that identity theft has been on the rise in recent years, and while it’s difficult to investigate, law enforcement authorities catch some of the thieves and are looking at ways to combine resources to increase their success rate.

The best deterrent, authorities say, is for people to guard their personal information to keep from becoming victims.

“There’s been an increase in overall fraud in the last couple years,” said Montgomery County Assistant District Attorney Tony Gil, who heads up the insurance fraud and arson unit and previously prosecuted economic crimes for three years. “It’s a lot of work to get to the bottom of identity theft … [determining] how the crime was committed and who did it takes an incredible amount of work. Generally the police in Montgomery County do a great job doing that.”

ID theft often involves fraudulently using someone’s credit card information to make purchases, using someone’s personal information to open credit accounts and various schemes, usually over the Internet, to obtain money.

In 2009, Upper Dublin police had 48 identity theft cases assigned to a detective, with probably at least the same number — those with no clues at all — not assigned, Detective Sgt. Mike Byrne said. A third of the assigned were solved.

Four were solved by an arrest and 12 were “exceptionally cleared — we know who did it but the case may have been turned over to [federal authorities] or prosecuted by another agency,” he said.

Identity theft is a federal crime and if it’s carried out interstate, “the feds get involved,” he said. Detectives may be able to track an IP address, but if the crime is interstate or international in scope, “we don’t have the resources to follow up on that,” he said.

In early September, an Upper Dublin woman was victimized by someone who accessed her hotmail account and sent an e-mail to her 600 contacts saying she was in London, had been robbed and needed money to settle a hotel bill, according to a police report. The woman was alerted to the scam when she started getting calls Sept. 2 from family and friends asking if she was OK, police said.

One of the victim’s contacts, in Chicago, wired $2,000 to Manchester, England, via Western Union, Byrne said. The victim contacted Chicago police, who contacted Manchester, England.

There’s not much local police can do in such instances; the FBI and the U.S. Postal Inspector get involved in those types of investigations, he said.

According to an FBI report, its Internet Crime Complaint Center received 336,655 complaints in 2009, a 22.3 percent increase over 2008. Among the top five complaints were e-mails claiming to be from the FBI asking for money or personal information.

The others — common themes reported to local police as well, include: non-delivered merchandise or non-payment — either a seller didn’t ship a promised item or a buyer didn’t pay for an item; advance fee fraud — the victim is asked for money upfront for goods or services that never materialize; identity theft — the theft or attempted theft of some kind of identity information; and overpayment fraud — a person sends someone selling an item a check or money order (that turns out to be fraudulent) for a greater amount than the price of the item and asks the seller to deposit the payment, deduct the actual price and return the difference.

How thieves steal an identity

• Dumpster diving: rummaging through trash to get personal information from bills or other papers.

• Skimming: stealing credit/debit card numbers by using a special storage device when processing a card.

• Phishing: Pretending to be a financial institution or company and sending spam or pop-up messages to get personal information.

• Changing your address: diverting billing statements to another location by completing a change of address form.

• Old-fashioned theft: stealing wallets and purses; mail, including bank and credit card statements; preapproved credit offers; new checks or tax information. Stealing personnel records or bribing employees with access to them.

• Pretexting: Using false pretenses to obtain personal information from financial institutions, telephone companies and other sources.

A couple of years ago a middle manager at Prudential was stealing personal information on customers in the company’s computer system, resulting in victims of identity theft all over the country, Byrne recalled. Through a joint investigation by Prudential security and the Upper Dublin and Montgomery township police the thief was identified and arrested and subsequently prosecuted by a federal agency.

According to Gil, there’s been “an uptick in schemes” involving counterfeit credit cards. A group of people are going to the mall and working in groups of four and they have multiple credit cards with real credit card numbers and fictitious names. “They’re stealing the numbers off the Internet or some other source,” he said.

Many of the counterfeit credit cards look almost identical to the actual credit card for a particular store or credit card issuer, Gil said. “It’s been going on, on and off, for years. Lately we’ve seen it usually in groups from out of town.”

Protecting yourself

Federal, state and local law enforcement authorities offer a number of tips on how to prevent becoming a victim of identity theft. Among them are:

• Carry credit cards, Social Security card, passport and birth certificate in your wallet or purse ONLY when needed.

• Monitor monthly credit card statements and order a credit report yearly to check for inaccuracies and fraudulent use of account. To obtain a credit report — provided free once a year — from each of the three national credit bureaus call 1-877-322-8228 or go to www.annualcreditreport.com.

• Report lost or stolen credit cards to the issuer immediately; sign new credit cards — before someone else does.

• Check expiration dates on credit cards and contact the issuer if you don’t get a replacement before they expire. Do the same for monthly financial statements and bills.

• Never give out credit card or bank account numbers over the phone, through the mail or over the Internet unless you’re sure who you are dealing with, and, if using the Internet, know the website is secure. A secure or “encrypted” transaction will have two features: an icon of a lock appearing in the bottom strip of the Web browser page, and the URL address for the Web page will change from “http;” to “https” for the page on which you input the personal data.

• When ordering new checks, do not provide information such as Social Security number, telephone number or driver’s license number on them.

• Never leave receipts behind — at ATMs, on counters at financial institutions, or at gasoline pumps. Keep the receipts and shred when you are done with them.

• Match credit card receipts against monthly bills and check financial statements for accuracy.

• Keep items with personal information in a safe place. Shred charge receipts, copies of credit applications, insurance forms, bank checks and financial statements that are being discarded, as well as expired charge cards and credit offers received in the mail.

• Add passwords to credit card, bank and other accounts and avoid using easily available information, such as mother’s maiden name, your birth date, phone number, last four digits of Social Security number or a series of consecutive numbers. Memorize the passwords; don’t carry them in your wallet.

• Put outgoing mail, especially bill payments, at a post office or blue U.S. Postal Service collection box or give directly to your mail carrier.

• Be conscious of mail or telephone solicitations disguised as promotions that offer instant prizes or awards designed solely to obtain personal information or credit card numbers.

• Watch out for e-mails that appear to be official messages from banks or merchants asking you to update or verify account or billing information. While they may contain realistic logos of banks, online retailers or credit card companies, they are attempts to get recipients to divulge personal financial data.

Gil said his advice is to “make sure you’re current with anti-virus software” when doing anything online. Most importantly, “keep your Social Security card in a safe place — it’s the most dangerous piece of information to lose.”

In one case he prosecuted a woman used someone’s Social Security number to get neonatal care, with the insurance company being the victim.

Another time he prosecuted a case in which a bank employee stole someone’s identity, Gil said, adding, “sometimes you can’t control it.”

People should make sure they check their credit report for strange charges or accounts they did not open, he said.

What to do if you are a victim

Take the following steps as soon as possible and keep a record with details of conversations and copies of all correspondence.

• Call the toll-free fraud number of any one of the three consumer reporting companies to place a fraud alert on your credit report: TransUnion, 1-800-680-7289, www.transunion.com; Equifax, 1-800-525-6285, www.equifax.com; Experian, 1-888-397-3742, www.experian.com. The company you call is required to contact the other two, which will place an alert on your credit report.

• File a report with local police and obtain an identity theft report.

• Close accounts you know, or believe, were tampered with or opened fraudulently. Call and speak with someone in the security or fraud department and follow up in writing, using certified mail. Ask for forms to dispute any charges or debits to your accounts or fraudulently opened accounts.

• If the crime involved the U.S. Mail, report it online to the U.S. Postal Inspection Service at http://postalinspectors.uspis.gov.

• If the crime involved counterfeit credit cards or computer hacking, report it to the U.S. Secret Service.

• Report the ID theft online with the Federal Trade commission at www.consumer.gov/idtheft or call 1-877-IDTHEFT. The FTC has counselors to help resolve financial and other problems that can result from ID theft.

“It’s such a big problem, everybody will be a victim eventually, if they haven’t already,” Byrne said. “The Internet makes it easy to do long distance; it’s extremely difficult to investigate successfully. If people would just stop and think before they wire money through Western Union to someone they never met …”

Recalling a case several years ago of a Bucks County prisoner who obtained personal information through fraudulent calls to hospitals and was eventually caught and prosecuted, he said, “They have all day. We’re always playing catch-up to try to figure out their schemes.”

For more information on ID theft, contact:

U.S. Postal Inspection Service

Federal Trade Commission

U.S. Secret Service

Department of Justice

Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Access To Justice In U.S. At Third-World Levels, Says Survey


Why haven't more Americans successfully sued the banks that lured them into fraudulent mortgages, then foreclosed on them without the required paperwork?
It could be because the civil justice system in this country is essentially inaccessible to many Americans -- and when it does get accessed, is tilted toward the wealthy and moneyed interests.
That's certainly consistent with the finding of a world-wide survey unveiled Thursday morning that ranks the United States lowest among 11 developed nations when it comes to providing access to justice to its citizens -- and lower than some third-world nations in some categories.
Particularly when it comes to access to and affordability of legal counsel in civil disputes, the U.S. ranks 20 out of the 35 nations surveyed, below not only developed nations but also such countries as Mexico, Croatia and the Dominican Republic.
The results are from the World Justice Project's new "Rule of Law Index", which assesses how laws are implemented and enforced in practice around the globe. Countries are rated on such factors as whether government officials are accountable, whether legal institutions protect fundamental rights, and how ordinary people fare in the system. The index will expand from 35 countries to 70 next year.
The lowest-ranking countries in this year's survey included Liberia, Kenya, Nigeria and Pakistan.
The U.S. didn't lead the world on any of the rule-of-law measures, ranking near the bottom of the developed world on most -- including even fundamental rights. But the most striking findings related to access to justice for ordinary people.
As part of its fact-finding, the organization polled 1,000 people in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, and found a significant gap between the rich and the poor in terms of their use and satisfaction with the civil courts system. According to a news release:
For instance, only 40% of low-income respondents who used the court system in the past three years reported that the process was fair, compared to 71% of wealthy respondents. This 31% gap between poor and rich litigants in the USA is the widest among all developed countries sampled. In France this gap is only 5%, in South Korea it is 4% and in Spain it is nonexistent.
Juan Botero, the index's director, told the Huffington Post that the U.S.'s poor ranking on access to justice "is a little bit surprising" considering that our society is so prone to litigation, and so fascinated by TV shows about law and order. But he said the index simply quantifies what was already the consensus among legal experts: That when it comes to access to justice, "the U.S. could do a better job, especially with marginalized communities."
Indeed, the index's findings are consistent with previous studies of access to justice by lower-income people. The Legal Services Corporation reported last year that state-level studies had concluded that less than one in five of the legal problems experienced by low-income people are addressed with help from either a private or legal-aid lawyer.
Unequal access to the legal system is also a problem that the Obama administration has publicly acknowledged and is trying to address.
In March, Attorney General Eric Holder appointed prominent Harvard Law Professor Larry Tribe to serve as a senior counselor in charge of a new Access to Justice Initiative. His goal is to work with judges and lawyers across the country to find ways to help people who cannot afford a lawyer.
As Tribe himself put it in a June speech:
The truth is that as a nation, we face nothing short of a justice crisis. It is a crisis both acute and chronic, affecting not only the poor but the middle class. The situation we face is unconscionable. It's why the President and the Attorney General created the Access to Justice initiative that I am leading, and it's why we won't rest until we have made measurable and sustainable progress, but to make that progress and to do it across the board, we have got to first acknowledge that what we do know is far outweighed by what we don't know.
Botero said the index is not intended to be prescriptive. "The index doesn't give you a complete recipe for action; it doesn't even give you a full diagnosis. It's like a thermometer," he said.
Nevertheless, he noted that many other countries have more robust mechanisms to provide legal assistance to the poor.
For instance, in many Latin American countries, law students spend their final year of law school serving the poor. Or in Japan, many disputes are adjudicated by administrative bodies. In the U.S., he said, small claims court works very well. "However, the scope of coverage is limited." The result: "There seems to be a gap in the system."
The U.S. criminal justice system received a mixed grade in the new index, ranking well when it comes to guaranteeing due process of law, but ranking last among developed nations on delivering impartial justice.
How exactly does the index define access to justice? The report states:
In a nutshell, these factors measure whether regular citizens can peacefully and effectively resolve their personal grievances in accordance with generally accepted social norms, rather than resorting to violence or self-help.
For civil and informal justice, this implies a service that is affordable, effective, impartial, and culturally competent. For criminal justice, this implies a system capable of investigating and adjudicating criminal offences impartially and effectively, while ensuring that the rights of suspects and victims are protected.
Impartiality includes absence of arbitrary or irrational distinctions based on social or economic status, and other forms of bias, as well as decisions that are free of improper influence by public officials or private interests. Accessibility includes general awareness of available remedies, availability and affordability of legal advice and representation, and absence of excessive or unreasonable fees, procedural hurdles, and other barriers to access the formal dispute resolution systems. Access to justice also requires fair and effective enforcement of the decisions.
And why is all this important? The report explains:
Establishing the rule of law is fundamental to achieving communities of opportunity and equity--communities that offer sustainable economic development, accountable government, and respect for fundamental rights.


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Dan Froomkin is senior Washington correspondent for the Huffington Post. You can send him an e-mail, bookmark his page; subscribe to RSS feed, follow him on Twitter, friend him on Facebook, and/or become a fan and get e-mail alerts when he writes.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Know what you're revealing when you go online


Do you ever wonder about those ads on a website that specifically mention your hometown? Or ads for products you looked at online, but never purchased? Some online ads seem frighteningly tailored to your likes.
By simply visiting a website, you reveal more than you probably realize. They know where you're located and other sites you've visited. Sites can even learn intimate details about you, like medical conditions.
Many sites gather information about your computer. They can tweak design elements for your visit. If your Internet speed is slow, for example, they can automatically change a video's resolution.
See for yourself what you reveal by simply visiting a website. Visit my Privacy Check page now at www.komando.com/privacycheck. This page is for demonstration purposes only; no information about you or your machine is saved.
Software and IP address
So, for starters, sites know what browser and operating system you use. They can also see the language you speak. A malicious site can target specific vulnerabilities in your browser.
Sites also know your IP address. Your IP address identifies your computer on the Internet. It reveals your Internet provider. Undoubtedly, you've seen ads tailored for your location. Now you know why.
You can't block sites from gathering this information. You can use a proxy service, though. This routes your traffic through online servers. Since you don't connect directly, sites can't see your information. Tor, Privoxy and Jap are three free proxy services.
Don't think for a moment that you can use a proxy service to harass others or commit online crimes. A proxy service may be subpoenaed for your true IP address.
Browsing history
Perhaps the most worrying thing that sites can see is your browsing history. Sites know the last site you visited. And with a little work, they can see any site you've visited. That's creepy. And it puts you in danger. Phishing attacks are more effective if criminals know the banking site you use.
Sites must exploit a Web feature to see your history. By default, browsers display links you've visited in a different color. And sites can see how a page looks on your computer. If a link changes color, the site knows you've visited that link. Using special code, a site can check more than 25,000 links per second!
This only works for sites still in your history. So, to protect yourself, keep your browser's history clear. You can tell your browser not to keep a history.
In Firefox, click Tools, then Options and then Privacy. Set "Remember my browsing history for at least" to 0 days. In Internet Explorer, click Tools, then Internet Options and then General. Under Browsing History, click Settings. Set "Days to keep pages in history" to 0.
Cookies
You've heard about cookies. Sites place these small files on your machine. They then track you as you surf the Web. They can even tie your online and offline lives. You can clear these cookies easily. In IE, click Tools, then Internet Options. Click Delete under Browsing History. In Firefox, click Tools, then Clear Recent History. You'll find options for clearing cookies and other data.
Lately, we've been hearing about Flash cookies. Flash Player sets these cookies; many video sites and ads use Flash. Flash cookies are difficult to remove and can be used to bring back browser cookies. Learn how to block them at Komando.com/news.
There's a darker side. Advertisers want more than details about your computer. They may build a dossier containing your name, address, browsing habits and more. And that isn't the only threat. Malicious sites may use the information to attack you. Of course, this information could be made public if you're involved in a court case.
Kim Komando hosts the nation's largest talk radio show about computers and the Internet. To get the podcast or find the station nearest you, visit www.komando.com/listen. To subscribe to Kim's free e-mail newsletters, sign up at www.komando.com/newsletters. Contact her at C1Tech@gannett.com.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Yahoo Video shows 5 ways ID thieves work...

Scary Yahoo video shows 5 ways Identity Thieves can steal from you. Take a look at the video and then see how Prepaid Legal can help you protect yourself.